patriot into traitor walking on moon

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  • 7/28/2019 Patriot Into Traitor Walking on Moon

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    Context: This poem is a criticism of politics and peoples opinion. When a leader comes into power, people callhim a patriot. When he is dethroned, the same leader is considered a traitor. This is the tragedy of modern politics

    The leader in this poem fell a victim to the same state of affairs. When he came into power, people showeredflowers at him as a patriot. But after a year, they declared him a traitor, when he was no more in power. They took

    him to the gallows. But Browning has ended his poem not on a tragic, rather on a next world optimistic note.

    Stanza 1

    It was roses, roses, all the way,With myrtle mixed in my path like mad:

    The house-roofs seemed to heave and sway,

    The church-spires flamed, such flags they had,

    A year ago on this very day.

    Explanation:

    In these lines the poet says through the mouth of a political leader, when for the first time, only one year ago, onthat very day, he came to power, the people gave him a very warm welcome. There were roses mixed with myrtle

    flowers which people spread on his way through and through. The house-tops were crowded with people and they

    were moving and swinging like mad people. Also they were so happy as if they were mad. The minarets and

    domes of churches were shining with light. These churches were decorated with colorful flags. All this was on

    that very day when the politician came into power and it took place only one year ago.Stanza 2

    The air broke into a mist with bells,

    The old walls rocked with the crowd and cries.

    Had I said, "Good folk, mere noise repels--

    But give me your sun from yonder skies!"

    They had answered, "And afterward, what else?"When the people were given him a warm welcome they rang bells and raised slogans. These different voices

    mingled with one another and produced a sort of music. The air became misty and heavy because of the noisy

    slogans and the ringing bells. The slogans of the crowd were so heavy and loud that the adjacent walls of theroad-side houses trembled with various cries and noise of the crowd. These people were welcoming him so

    happily that if he had told them that mere noise and slogans did not please him. And that they should give him thesun, that is there in the sky far away from them , they would have replied, that was executed (done and what else

    they could do for him the leader).

    Stanza 3

    Alack, it was I who leaped at the sun

    To give it my loving friends to keep!

    Naught man could do, have I left undone:

    And you see my harvest, what I reap

    This very day, now a year is run.In these lines the leader regretfully says that the people did not help him, instead, it was he who leaped at the sun

    and made impossible, possible for them. He brought the sun down and handed it over to his dear friends

    (countrymen). He made them realize that every impossible could be made possible for sincere friends. As such hemade every effort and did not leave anything undone for them. Had he left anything undone, nobody else wouldhave done that for them. But he further says with great sorrow that today when only one year has lapsed and that

    he is no more in chair, his reward can be seen. It can also be seen what he is reaping as a reward of his deeds. He

    has been branded as a traitor by the people of his nation.

    Stanza 4

    There's nobody on the house-tops now--

    Just a palsied few at the windows set;

    For the best of the sight is, all allow,

    At the Shambles' Gate--or, better yet,

  • 7/28/2019 Patriot Into Traitor Walking on Moon

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    By the very scaffold's foot, I trow.In these lines the poet mourns that nobody can be seen on the housetops to welcome him now. It is quite opposite

    to the scene when he was received by them. Now there are only a few people, who are rather paralyzed and arestanding at the windows. Now they are watching a different sight. This sight is a sort of ridicule and everybody

    agrees to it. Obviously, the sight is horrible because the leader is now being taken to the slaughter-house, or it can

    be better said, the leader thinks, that he is being taken to the gallows to be hanged there. It is all the reward of his

    good deeds. His deeds have been converted into wicked deeds and people are now punishing him for his supposedmisdeeds.

    Stanza 5

    I go in the rain, and, more than needs,

    A rope cuts both my wrists behind;

    And I think, by the feel, my forehead bleeds,

    For they fling, whoever has a mind,

    Stones at me for my year's misdeeds.In these lines the poet also mopes over his sad condition. He says that the people are carrying him to the gallows in

    the rain. They unnecessarily, have tied his hands behind his back with a tight rope. When they are taking him to

    the slaughter-house, the rope cuts his both hands at wrists. The culprit (the leader) feels that his fore-head is

    bleeding. This is because everybody in his right sense is throwing stones at him. Everybody feels that he has donenothing for his countrymen. Every person has turned against him and the achievements of his past one year have

    been changed to misdeeds. This means they have forgotten his service to them and they are now punishing him for

    his good work for them.

    Stanza 6

    Thus I entered, and thus I go!

    In triumphs, people have dropped down dead.

    "Paid by the world, what dost thou owe

    Me?"--God might question; now instead,

    'Tis God shall repay: I am safer so.

    In the given lines the poet, through the mouth of the deposed leader says that he was brought honourably to the

    chair and with great pomp and show but now he is being taken very insultingly to the gallows. He says sometimesgreat heroes fall from their climax and die. Such has not happened to him. Had he died in the peak of his power, he

    would have been happy. Further the leader ridiculously says that heroes cannot expect reward from God in thenext world because they get their reward in this world. In his case people have not done him justice. They have

    killed him. He says after death he will go to his Lord Creator where God Might question him about his deeds he

    had done for the people. He would reply that he had done his best for them but they rewarded him with shame.

    Now he will ask God for a reward because God is just and He would give him the best reward in the other worldfor his service to his people. He would be safe with God in the world here after.

    What are your observations of "Walking on the Moon"?

    Walking on the moon is an informative essay by David Scott. He has written this essay to tell us about his

    adventure of visiting the moon for three days. He has used a number of metaphors to make this essay interestingand attractive. He tells us about the sights, experiences and weightlessness he observed there. He made this

    journey in the Apollo 15 on July 29, 1971 and landed on the surface of moon with the help of a lunar module along

    with his two companions. They felt weightlessness as the gravity of the moon was sixteen times less than that ofearth. They felt as they were walking on a trampoline. There were mountains on the surface of the moon. Stars

    were shining there. Then the sun rose with its full brightness and they came down on the surface of the moon with

    the help of a ladder. There was no air, no water, no plants and no life. Only brownish mountains and the beacheswere there. One day on the moon was equal to 50 hours on the earth. They walked on the moon with an air of pride

    and honour as they were doing what no human being had ever done and they were the first to touch that mystical

    soil under their feet. These were the observations and feelings of Scott which he has composed in his essay toshare them with the readers so that they can also feel his enthusiasm and pride.